A photo police shared from the scene shows the woman’s white sedan straddling one of the rails, apparently stuck there. Running parallel to the two sets of tracks is a roadway that other drivers are using.

“It happens all the time there,” one Facebook user commented. “Kinda head shaking.”

She’s not the first — and won’t be the last — driver led astray by her GPS.

Police in eastern Iowa issued a frustrated warning to drivers in May after at least four people got their vehicles trapped in dirt ravines, The Des Moines Register reported. GPS systems had taken the drivers down what the newspaper described as a “basically non-existent road,” which is riddled with deep puddles and ruts.

Photos of the perilous road show drivers probably should have known better.

“Use your brain,” said Mount Vernon Police Chief Doug Shannon, according to The Register. “If your brain tells you not to go down, that’s probably not a good way to go.”

Even professional drivers fall for misleading tricks played by GPS systems.

In July, a man driving an 18-wheeler nearly plowed into the ocean before a sandy beach stopped his 53-foot truck from going any further, The Charlotte Observer reported. He had reportedly been confused by his GPS.